7mm National Railway Museum Workbench - Larry Goddard

James

Western Thunderer
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The National Railway Museum houses a large 7mm layout based around half of David Jenkinson's first venture in the scale - he was the Museum's Education Officer at the time. It's been in daily use since 1981!

I've been one of the volunteer team looking after for eight years or so.

I thought people might be interested in some the projects we have.

The locos cover between 1.5 and 3 real miles this Heljan class 40 covered, as a conservative estimate, over 2,000 miles in five years!

It wore it's wheels like this!

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So new wheels, a repaint and replacing many lost pipes and bits. Buffer beam pipes from wire generally to better resist knocks.

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And back in service.

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Yorkshire Dave

Western Thunderer
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Aside from the filth they're just as they come - though I have polished the buffer shafts on the Oleo buffers.

I remember seeing lines of the Tunnel Cement Presflos sitting in the WCML exchange sidings at Pitstone cement works in the 1970s. Below is a 1981 photo on Flickr.

 
Cheap and Cheerful Toad New

James

Western Thunderer
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A bit of a cheap and cheerful model, a Lima 1/45 scale GWR Toad.

Another volunteer had replaced the wheels, buffers and couplings; I painted, glazed and weathered it.

There's so much wrong with the Lima model - the ever so slightly smaller scale isn't a real issue but the lack of depth of the body side details, position of the footboards, etc are. But from a distance, passing by, just about acceptable perhaps?

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timbowales

Western Thunderer
View attachment 235302

A bit of a cheap and cheerful model, a Lima 1/45 scale GWR Toad.

Another volunteer had replaced the wheels, buffers and couplings; I painted, glazed and weathered it.

There's so much wrong with the Lima model - the ever so slightly smaller scale isn't a real issue but the lack of depth of the body side details, position of the footboards, etc are. But from a distance, passing by, just about acceptable perhaps?

View attachment 235303
What Tony Wright of BRM & the other place would call a "layout" model. To be used but not inspected in a display case?
 

simond

Western Thunderer
I picked up one at a show many years back that the previous owner had doctored by the simple expedient of a grey-painted slab of ally plate between body and chassis, about 3mm iirc. With metal wheels and 3-links, it served, along with 3 big-big/lima minerals for the kids until they lost interest, and I think sold for what I paid. Good value!
 

LarryG

Western Thunderer
Some of the younger members of my family visited the NRM last year and were surprised to discover some of the stuff on the 0 gauge layout had passed through their grandads paintshop. After seeing the wear on this thread, something I hadn't even considered, I wonder what state those 1970's models are in now.
 

James

Western Thunderer
Some of the younger members of my family visited the NRM last year and were surprised to discover some of the stuff on the 0 gauge layout had passed through their grandads paintshop. After seeing the wear on this thread, something I hadn't even considered, I wonder what state those 1970's models are in now.
The rake of ex-LMS coaches in blood and custard comes to mind!
 
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